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a nitrogenous base, phosphate group, and pentose sugar
DNA is a double helix formed by base pairs attached to a sugar-phosphate backbone.
The components are a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar, and a phosphate. The nitrogen compound is called a nucleobaseand combines with the sugar to form the nucleoside, and the phosphate binds to the carbon in the sugar.
a nucleoside consist of base and sugar but a nucleotide consist of base sugar and phosphate group
sugar, phosphate and a base
a nitrogenous base, phosphate group, and pentose sugar
The sugar-phosphate supporting structure of the DNA double helix is called the backbone. This is why the DNA is commonly referred to as a double helix.
five-carbon sugar group, phosphate group, and a nitrogenous base
The fiber RDA requirement for women is
Base, sugar ring, and phosphate :) (Hope this helps!)
It binds to a Deoxyribose sugar. Thus, the structure of DNA is Phosphate-Deoxyribose-Nitrogenous Base.
DNA is a double helix formed by base pairs attached to a sugar-phosphate backbone.
Building blocks = NUCLEOTIDES consist of: * ƒA pentose (5-carbon) sugar arranged in a ring called deoxyribose * An organic nitrogenous base * A phosphate group
Sugar, phosphate, and nitrogenous base.
Sugar, nitrogenous base and phospsate
A nucleotide consists of a phosphate molecule, a deoxyribose sugar, and a base (adenine, cytosine, gaunine, and thymine).
a DNA molecule is made up of a phosphate, sugar and base A double Helix Strand